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Some Thoughts after a Friend's Miscarriage

The Jewish Way in Miscarriage and Morning-

Hello to all of the Jewish pregnant ladies in the whole world! I love you! You're the greatest!

All of you know that I always try to keep things happy and inspirational at Jewish Pregnancy/Childbirth Online, but this week was a week of tragedies- one thing after another, and when this kind of string of events develops, I feel like Somebody wants me to share what's going on in my life with all of you. The first thing that happened this week was I got an e-mail from a mother in South Africa whom I'd been corresponding with for a few weeks that she had sad news- she had just had a miscarriage after years of struggling with fertility difficulties; then I heard from another friend from Jerusalem that she had miscarried last week in her tenth week, and then, finally, I heard about another friend who miscarried at the end of her fourth month. A week of tragically-ended pregnancies- horrible, blood-curdling sadness, disappointment, from the heights of happiness to the deepest valleys of lost hope, lost life.

The friend who lost the baby in her fourth month was still in the hospital- still waiting there after several days of unsuccessful attempts to induce labor in order to deliver the fetus. This friend is one of my favorite people in the whole world- even though she is very busy with her five children, and I am very busy answering letters from a large percentage of all the Jewish pregnant ladies in the whole universe- so even though she lives only two blocks away, I only see her once every two or three months. She has five beautiful, healthy children, a history of symptomless pregnancies, and she is an amazingly healthy person- running and going to the gym almost every morning. She is also a very upbeat person, the kind of person who is always giving giving giving to others- a pillar of strength in our little community.

To hear that this had happened to her made me very sad. Not so long ago I would have felt uncomfortable going to a person who had just been through such an awful tragedy- worried about it being awkward, not saying the right thing, worried that I was imposing on their space, disrupting their privacy. But two years ago, I had a pivotal experience. I went to the shiva for a fourteen year old boy who had been tragically murdered by terrorists. I had been so haunted by his story that I felt I had to go- and even though I had never met this family- I sat with the family, and just listened to them talk for a very long time about their lost son, and then, when I was about to leave I told the mother how much I, and the rest of Israel, had been touched by this awful horrific tragedy- and I could see it meant something to her and her husband as well that I had come. So, I learned from that that the Torah is right on track when it teaches us that two of the most important things we can possibly do in the whole world is comfort mourners. And I didn't have to be therapist or a pop-psychology genius to be of help- just listening and being there had been enough.

So I went to visit my friend on Monday morning. She is a very popular person- and I expected that I would barely be able to get into her hospital room, pushed into the hall by the crowd of visitors- putting in a symbolic appearance for half an hour and then rushing back home to my computer.

But, when I got there, I found my friend shaking and convulsing in the room all by herself- nobody around to sit by her side as she went through labor to give birth to this dead fetus that they had been trying to induce since the previous Thursday. Her husband had been going back and forth between her and the kids, waiting for the birth, and had stayed at the hospital until five am the night before- and then when the nurses told him the birth would not happen any time soon, he had gone home to sleep.

When I walked in, and saw my friend in this terrible condition, I thought for a moment that I was intruding- that maybe she would not want me to see her like this. But then I saw what a good thing it was that I had arrived right then- an incredible thing that I had shown up at that very moment- to help her out by getting her a cup of ice, distracting her with conversation, and mostly listening to her talk- getting things off her chest after four days of facing this terrible tragedy more or less alone with her husband- or just plain alone.

After an hour, the nurse came in, and told me to stand outside, and when I came back five minutes later my friend was sitting on the bed looking a bit stunned. She had had the baby. Can you imagine if I had happened to come a day earlier, an hour later- what she would have done? Gone through this all on her own? The thought of this is just horrifying. Then I went with her to the surgery ward to finish up the D and C procedure, held her glasses and scarf in my purse and went to buy some food for her after the hours and hours of fasting required before surgery, and then sat in the waiting room to accompany her back up to the Gynecology ward. All in all, instead of half an hour, I was with her for five hours.

I have been thinking about this experience nearly non-stop ever since. I have never before been so close to a miscarriage- having always heard about miscarriages as something that happened to someone I know long in the past, but never being right there while it was happening. It's made me realize a few things. First of all, I've been thinking about how incredibly, amazingly important it is to visit women who have had miscarriages. Maybe we think that they want to deal with everything on their own, and we want to respect their privacy, and in some cases maybe this is true. But Judaism teaches us that when a person is sick or suffering we are required to reach out to them- even if we go all the way to the hospital or their house, and they tell us that they would prefer to be alone, and we come right back home. We are required to make our effort. This is especially important in the case of people who live far from their families- as so many people do nowadays.

I was also thinking how the tragic loss of a pregnancy makes us value so much more a basic, healthy, boring pregnancy, a basic, healthy baby after a basic, boring birth. It is so easy to take these earthshaking miracles for granted as something that is expected or ordinary. For me, being with my friend- and focusing for five hours on the fragility of life- made me come home and look at my children differently. I looked at my two-year old, who, just between you and me, has been driving me up the walls on the long days that we have been more or less homebound because of the war with Iraq and two weeks of cold, rainy days- and I saw for the first time in a long time what a miracle she is- how she is growing up into a little person with her own personality, her impressive strength of will, her little face that is so amazingly, adorably her. The birth of a child, and being able to raise that child to adulthood is such an incredible incredible gift from G-d- and unfortunately, it took a tragedy to make me hug my children as tight as I really should every day- unable to take them for granted as I do all too often.

In the book Stuffed by Patricia Volk (about a Jewish restaurant family- the best book I have read in years!) she writes about how Jews take an egg on Passover night, and dip it in salt water, and eat it. She suggests that this means that we take life (represented by the round, cycle-like egg), and dip it in hardship and sadness (the salt water), and then we do not throw the sadness in life away- instead, we eat it. We gain sustenance and strength from it. We make it into a gift, we try our hardest to make something holy out of it- because that's the Jewish way.

My Favorite Kind of Year

This year (not 2003- but 5763) is the best best kind of year... it's a year with two Adars (we stick in an extra month in order to keep the Jewish year- which is a lunar year- in synch with the seasons (Passover always in the spring, Rosh Hashana always in the fall etc.- as opposed to Ramadan which can be any season of the year since the Muslims never add an extra month). That means, that this year is a PREGNANT YEAR, that's really what we call it (shana meuberet). I just had to share that with you.What an incredible year to be pregnant in- may it be full of only blessing and happiness and good news.

The Best Link Ever

Wow, was I excited to hear about a new website, a forum for pregnant women in Jerusalem (my home for the past decade). With practical info, and forums for advice. What a wonderful idea!

The Book

My book, Expecting Miracles, which will turn your pregnancy and birth upside down- and generally change your life, will be coming out this summer (2003). But, if you're pregnant, and must must must read the book now- then I have made some copies of the manuscript that I will very happily send out to women who will give birth before publication (which, if you're pregnant now, means you). Click here to get details on how to order.

28,000 hits

Just checking my site statistics, and saw that a few months ago I got an all time high! 28,000 hits! Thanks so much for helping to make this happen!

I get letters almost every day from women who tell me about their pregnancies and births and lives. Believe it or not, while you might think that as the Jewish Pregnancy lady I am being stalked by the producers for the Today Show and the New York Times Middle East Correspondent for interviews, I'll share a secret with you- I actually have an incredibly small, largely homebound life, limited more or less to the five block radius around my house in downtown Jerusalem. I barely even know anyone outside of my own neighborhood (and I am totally serious)!

And then I come home and get an E-mail from San Diego or New York or Panama or Singapore or Berlin or Antwerp (I really have heard from all those places). It is just an incredible incredible gift- and may G-d bless me that I use this site well, to inspire all you pregnant ladies out of the doldrums of pregnancy- and see G-d's hand in all of this incredible process. G-d is waiting for us to call out- to need His help- to establish a relationship with Him- and, ladies, these nine months is the greatest time in a woman's life to do just that.